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RUR & War with the Newts by  by Karel Capek
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R.U.R. (Russum's Universal Robots) is a "play" written almost 100 years ago and first introduced the world to the word "robot" which was derived from the Czech word "robota" meaning serf labor or hard work. ?apek has actually credited his brother (the painter and writer Josef ?apek) as the...

Article by Ant on 25th November 2011
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Rabbits by  by Terry Miles
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Are you playing the game? Made you look. The idea of a metagame that embroils a hero is not a new one, but it is hard to pull off. The amount of financial resources and secrecy that is required to convince Michael Douglas to jump off a building is beyond what the...

Article by Sam Tyler on 15th June 2021
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Radiant State by  by Peter Higgins
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I have been eagerly waiting for this novel, more than most. I thought Wolfhound Century was that good that I chose it as Book of the year for 2013. Truth and Fear — the second volume in the series, narrowly missed out from being book of the year 2014 (That accolade going to Dave Hutchinson's...

Article by Ant on 15th June 2015
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Radio Free Albemuth by  by Philip K Dick
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Radio Free Albemuth is a science fiction novel by the legendary author Philip K Dick. Radio Free Albemuth is like Valis but without Horselover Fat. Just Phil Dick and his buddy Nick getting too involved with Valis and the gestapo political system that is sending the commies to work camps. Like...

Article by TC on 4th March 2002
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Radio Life by  by Derek B Miller
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What do we expect from the future? I consider myself a half glass full type of person, but even my positivity has taken a battering in the past few years. A world buried under a sea of sand sounds like it may be better in some circumstances. If we do find ourselves roaming a desolate...

Article by Sam Tyler on 21st January 2021
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Raft by  by Stephen Baxter
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Raft was originally a short story published in Interzone back in 1989. Baxter admitted struggling to contain the story to such a short space however and eventually Raft became the authors first published novel. It's also the first book in the authors Xeelee sequence (although no Xeelee...

Article by Ant on 20th August 2018
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Raise the Gipper! by  by John Barnes
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Raise the Gipper! is a satire about the forthcoming American presidential elections (The Gipper is a nickname given to the late ex-president and former actor Ronald Reagan) and plays on the current political climate to great effect.

The story goes that the Republicans - who are currently...

Article by Ant on 7th June 2012
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Re-Coil by  by J. T. Nicholas
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Death is not something that people like to think about, but without death how are we to live? Within all of us in the unspoken knowledge that one day we will die. For this reason, we venture forth, live, breath, love and laugh. Some of us more than others, but without death would we even bother?...

Article by Sam Tyler on 2nd March 2020
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Ready Player One by  by Ernest Cline
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The smash hit science fiction debut from Cline in 2011, Ready Player One has been written about and reviewed many times since. What more can we say here at SFBook?

Cline’s story is a first person narrative that describes a new virtual utopia woven out of eighties culture. The real...

Article by Allen Stroud on 5th November 2015
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Reality 36 by  by Guy Haley
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Richard is a Level 5 Artificial Intelligence and a Private Eye, his partner a German ex military cyborg named Klein. Their newest case takes them on the hunt for a killer who has jumped realities, hiding in the artificial construct of Reality 36. Unless Richard and Klein can stop him his powers...

Article by Ant on 17th August 2011
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Realtime Interrupt by  by James P Hogan
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Realtime Interrupt is a science fiction novel by James P Hogan. This book has a theme somewhat similar to Permutation City by Greg Egan - Again it's about VR and how far it can be taken. Hogan does a nice job of it, but I wasn't as fascinated by Realtime Interrupt as I was with Permutation...

Article by TC on 29th January 1999
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A Hopeful Future

Review kindly provided by Vanessa Smyth. 

Welcome to the third and latest instalment in The Wayfarers series, Record of a Spaceborn Few by Becky Chambers. This current narrative is set within the same captivating universe as the first two books and, despite...

Article by Vanessa Smyth on 12th April 2019
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Red Dust by  by Yoss
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For those who haven't heard of him, Yoss is a Cuban science fiction author. He's one of Cuba's most iconic figures in literature, having written over twenty books so far, run science fiction workshops and even found time to be the lead singer of Heavy Metal band Tenaz.

Red Dust...

Article by Ant on 14th September 2020
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Red Mars by  by Kim Stanley Robinson
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The front page of this book has a quote from Arthur C. Clarke saying "[Red Mars]...It should be required reading for the colonists of the next century" – not sure about making it required reading, maybe it can be used as a test. If you can read this book without falling asleep, you will...

Article by TC on 1st January 1999
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Red Noise by  by John P Murphy
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There is a certain type of film that I love. It has a central character wronged in some way and this gives them the flimsy premise to basically kill all the bad guys. Death Wish, John Wick, The Equaliser, to name but a few. Red Noise by John P Murphy is the science...

Article by Sam Tyler on 14th July 2020
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Red Planet Blues by  by Robert J Sawyer
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The idea behind Red Planet Blues is a clever one. Mars has been colonised and is the new frontier with many parallels to the American gold-rush of the 1800's. This time around however it is genuine alien fossils that are in demand and fetch a high price. Since pretty much anything can now be...

Article by Ant on 15th August 2014
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Redshirts by  by John Scalzi
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I was seriously impressed with the first novel I read by Scalzi, the book was Old Man's War and the exceptional prose and clever story really won me over; so much so that I picked up Fuzzy Nation soon after - although I haven't had to read that book yet.

It was therefore with...

Article by Ant on 14th December 2012
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Redsight by  by Meredith Mooring
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There are space books and then there are Space Operas. What makes a good Space Opera is a sense of scale – the big and the small. Characters making decisions that define the entire Universe, but also their place in the local power struggle. Who will rule, which family? Which sect? Which...

Article by Sam Tyler on 1st March 2024
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Refractions by  by Mel Melcer
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Any story of colonial rescue, involving cryosleep spaceships and small crews operating to solve a crisis far from Earth has all the ingredients to be an exciting read. However, the way in which a writer organises these elements and makes them palatable as a story remains an issue at hand.

...
Article by Allen Stroud on 22nd November 2023
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Remembering Firebright by  by Philip K Dick
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Remembering Firebright is a biography of Philip K Dicks later life, written by his last wife Tessa Dick. I must admit that I am a very big fan of Philip K Dicks (PKD) works, he had a unique raw style that made his stories so easy to read and yet conveyed so well some of the very big topics he...

Article by Ant on 7th December 2010
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Rendezvous with Rama by  by Arthur C Clarke
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First published in 1972, Rendezvous with Rama is set in the 22nd century, and the story involves a cylindrical thirty-mile-long alien starship that passes through Earth's solar system. This story is told from the perspective of a group of human explorers, who intercept the ship in an attempt...

Article by TC on 1st February 1999
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Renewal by  by Hylton H Smith
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Renewal is a stand alone novel set after the events of the Darwinian Extension series by by the science fiction author Hylton H Smith. Phoenix is a colossal space vessel, built in the Mars Docks by three races (The Axis, Symbiants and Sapients), it's the size of a city and is currently in it's...

Article by Ant on 27th August 2010
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Resident Fear by  by Hylton H Smith
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It's the year 2018 and Britain has been expelled from the European Union. Over in the Northeast of the country the body of a wealthy Industrialist is found, draped at the base of the iconic sculpture - The Angel of the North. D.C.I. Jack Renton soon begins to understand that this isn't a simple...

Article by Ant on 23rd April 2012
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Resilient by  by Allen Stroud
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Resilient is the second book in Allen Stroud's Fractal series, picking up right after the events of Fearless. As such it's impossible not to provide some minor spoilers about Fearless while talking about Resilient. I will however try my best to give away as little as possible, and anything...

Article by Ant on 9th September 2024
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Resistance Reborn by  by Rebecca Roanhorse
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The Star Wars tie in novels have a rich and varied galaxy to explore. An author can reach into the distant past or take on the history of an obscure character. Sometimes you just want to read about the big hitters. What happens between those massive blockbuster movies? Whilst we are waiting for...

Article by Sam Tyler on 10th December 2019
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Revenger by  by Alastair Reynolds
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Alastair Reynolds has the kind of scientific imagination that few can match, his stories often explored on a grand scale. While the Universe in Revenger is certainly grand and gloriously imagined, the story itself it much more personal.

The far future Galaxy of Revenger has seen vast...

Article by Ant on 26th September 2016
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Ringturn by  by John C Mawson
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Ringturn is a science fiction novel by British Author John C Mawson. A number of people are abducted from earth during the time of the black death by alien forces and repopulated on a planet orbiting Epsilon Eridani, eleven light years from Earth. Slowly those frightened humans build a new...

Article by Ant on 1st October 2009
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Ringworld by  by Larry Niven
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Ringworld is a science fiction novel by the award winning author Larry Niven. I'm sure that I have already read this book once a long time ago - probably about ten to twelve years ago, and that was probably in danish - anyway I had forgotten most of the important stuff and everything that...

Article by TC on 1st May 1999
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Ringworld Engineers by  by Larry Niven
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Ringworld Engineers is the sequel to the science fiction classic Ringworld, by Larry Niven. This is the sequel to Ringword (doh!). There's not much to say about it, other than it is as good as the original Ringworld and you if you liked the original Ringworld book, you will probably like this...

Article by TC on 1st June 1999
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Ringworld Throne by  by Larry Niven
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The Ringworld Throne is the third book in the Ringworld series and centres on a variety of races banding together to kill a large nest of Vampires on a world that is the shape of a ring.

Third book in the Ringworld series. It hasn't been easy for me to keep a positive attitude towards this...
Article by TC on 1st July 1999
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Robopocalypse by  by Daniel H Wilson
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In the very near future the technology that we all take for granted will start to turn against us, rising up across the globe - led by the Artificial Intelligence known as Archos. Archos has decided that in order to save the unique planet called earth and the precious life it sustains he must...

Article by Ant on 2nd June 2011
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Roboteer by  by Alex Lamb
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Alex Lamb's Roboteer paints a picture of a future, that in the political climate of today, feels far too possible. 

In this book, a war rages between two sides of humanity, two different and opposing ideologies and lifestyles.  One side, combining genetic and induced mutation...

Article by Karen Fishwick on 16th December 2015
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Rockets, Redheads and Revolution is a short story collection by James P Hogan. RR&R is a mixed bag of science fiction short stories and non-fiction essays. The mix is a bit too heavy on the essay side for me, but that doesn't make it a bad book as HogRockets, Redheads and Revolution is a short...

Article by TC on 1st July 1999
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Rogue Moon by  by Algis Budrys
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Rogue Moon is the disquieting story of what happens when aberrant scientific ambition is matched by human obsession. Shortlisted for the 1961 Hugo Award (losing out to the quite wonderful A Canticle for Leibowitz by Walter M. Miller, Jr), Rogue Moon is one of the few genre novels that Algis...

Article by Ant on 20th February 2012
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Rogue Protocol by  by Martha Wells
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Murderbot, the gruff yet lovable, media obsessed Security AI is back in Rogue Protocol, the latest tale in Martha Wells’ The Murderbot Diaries, a Tor.com series of novellas. In the first story, the Nebula Award winning All Systems Red, Murderbot, a self-nicknamed...

Article by Michael Feeney on 1st October 2018
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I remember being a young science fiction reader and scouring the shelves of my local library looking for works designed for my age group. The only one I ever remember getting my hands on was Batteries Not Included by Seth McCoy. The...

Article by Sam Tyler on 16th July 2021
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The Rough Guide to the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy is the ultimate guide to the ultimate guide, written by Marcus O'Dair and published by the Rough Guides. Don't Panic. The Rough Guide to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy explores the ever-expanding universe created by Douglas Adams- the...

Article by Ant on 1st October 2009
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Running Black by  by P Todoroff
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Running Black is a science fiction novel, the debut of Patrick Todoroff. For the last eight years, the North Korean mercenary Tam Song has headed up Eshu International, a private security team that takes any job for the right price, no questions asked. Based in the Belfast Metro Zone, they're...

Article by Ant on 31st October 2010
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